BailOut posts
FeedPosted Aug 5th 2009 3:30PM by Zac Bissonnette (RSS feed)
Filed under: General Electric (GE)

And the madness continues: When
General Electric (NYSE:
GE) settled SEC securities fraud charges yesterday by paying a fine of $50 million, it was chump change in the context of the volume of federal assistance the company has already received.
"GE bent the accounting rules beyond the breaking point," said Robert Khuzami, Director of the SEC's Division of Enforcement.
"Overly aggressive accounting can distort a company's true financial condition and mislead investors." said David P. Bergers, Director of the SEC's Boston Regional Office. "Every accounting decision at a company should be driven by a desire to get it right, not to achieve a particular business objective. GE misapplied the accounting rules to cast its financial results in a better light."
Continue reading General Electric pays off regulators with bailout money
Posted Jul 31st 2009 5:00PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Rants and raves, Competitive strategy, Microsoft (MSFT), Ford Motor (F), Market matters, Money and Finance Today, Archer-Daniels-Midland (ADM), Chevron Corp (CVX), Nucor Corp (NUE), Options, BHP Billiton Ltd ADR (BHP), Wells Fargo (WFC), Bargain stocks, Anglo American (AAUKY), S and P 500, DJIA, Intuitive Surgical Inc (ISRG), American Eagle Outfitters (AEO)

Where on earth can you buy things on sale for less than bargain prices?
Imagine that you were shopping for a nice shirt, or watch, or bicycle and you have been tracking the prices all year (or ten) and the thing finally goes on sale. You drive to the store and while you are in transit, unknown to you, the store manager puts a half price sticker on the item. You would be overjoyed with glee! To buy something at half the price you already thought was a bargain --
that would be amazing!The fact is that this year the stock market has provided that opportunity. This year for the first time in most of our lives, you were able to do that to a degree that we have not witnessed before and have only read about.
Continue reading Serious Money: The world's dumbest market
Posted Jul 28th 2009 5:30PM by Zac Bissonnette (RSS feed)
Filed under: Comic Relief
If you've been desperately waiting for a new Merle Hazard song, the long winter is over: Merle is back with 'Bailout', a charming country ballad all about bailouts.
It's not an immediate classic the way that the catchy
H-E-D-G-E F-U-N-D was, but for lyrical depth and detail, it's definitely a new high for Mr. Hazard.
The song includes a scathing critique of Ben Bernanke, who is dismissed as an "academic." Watch the video below the cut.
Continue reading Merle Hazard is back with 'Bailout'
Posted Apr 21st 2009 2:00PM by Zac Bissonnette (RSS feed)
Filed under: Politics

Remember when all the pundits were going around reassuring us that the $700 billion TARP plan wasn't a taxpayer handout? It was a loan, gosh darn it, and a high-interest one at that. The economy would stabilize, liquidity would return, and the money would be paid back -- with interest!
Yeah, about that . . .
The New York Times reports that "In a significant shift, White House and Treasury Department officials now say they can stretch what is left of the $700 billion financial bailout fund further than they had expected a few months ago, simply by converting the government's existing loans to the nation's 19 biggest banks into common stock."
Continue reading TARP loans may not be loans for much longer
Posted Apr 16th 2009 4:40PM by Michael Fowlkes (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Forecasts, Management, Market matters, Citigroup Inc. (C), Recession, Financial Crisis

Financial giant
Citigroup, Inc. (NYSE:
C) will get its chance to impress Wall Street tomorrow morning when it reports its first quarter results.
The stock, which has been in free fall since late 2007, has actually been doing pretty good over the past month, and now it is time to see if the company can live up to expectations. The stock hit a low of $1.02 on March 5, and since that time has climbed a very impressive 290% to its current price of $4.00 a share.
Continue reading Citigroup first quarter earnings preview
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